Lesson

Adjectives: a nice new house, you look tired

Adjective order

≈ 15 min 8 block(s)

Text

Adjectives: a nice new house • you look tired

This lesson explains how adjectives describe nouns and how they are positioned in English. You will learn: where to place a single adjective before a noun, how to order multiple adjectives (for example: opinion before age), and how adjectives follow linking verbs (like be, look, feel).

  • Adjectives usually come before the noun: a nice house.
  • More than one adjective follows a conventional order: opinion → size → age → color → origin → material → purpose.
  • Adjectives come after linking verbs to describe the subject: You look tired.

Table

Adjective positions & examples

Position Structure Example
Before a noun (single adjective) Determiner + adjective + noun a nice house
Before a noun (multiple adjectives) Determiner + opinion + age + noun a nice new house
After a linking verb Subject + linking verb + adjective You look tired.
With quantity Number + size + age + noun two small new laptops

Tip

Key rule: order and position

Remember two main points:

  • Place descriptive adjectives before the noun: a nice office.
  • Place adjectives after linking verbs to describe the subject: The staff feel exhausted.
  • When using more than one adjective, follow the conventional order (opinion → size → age → color → origin → material → purpose).

If you can use a linking verb (be/look/feel/seem), the adjective comes after it.

Example

Examples in context

We moved to a nice new house last month.

You look tired after the long meeting.

She is an experienced senior manager in finance.

They ordered two small new laptops for the team.

Tip

Common mistakes to avoid

Learners often make these errors with adjectives:

  • Putting adjectives after the noun: *a house nice* is wrong in English (adjective goes before).
  • Incorrect adjective order: *a new nice house* instead of *a nice new house*.
  • Using an adverb instead of an adjective after a linking verb: *You feel tiredly* (wrong).
  • Adding unnecessary articles or determiners when combining adjectives: *the the new office*.

Focus on adjective order rules and remember linking verbs require adjectives (not adverbs).

Quiz

Choose the correct sentence:

Hint: Think about the typical order of adjectives before a noun.

Quiz

Complete: They moved into a _____ _____ house last week.

Hint: Which word expresses a personal feeling about the house?

Quiz

Choose the correct sentence:

Hint: Focus on adjective vs adverb after linking verbs.

Key Points

GrammarPoint

adjective

noun CEFR A2 //ˈædʒɪktɪv//

A word that describes a noun or pronoun.

Use an adjective to describe the product.

Vocabulary

nice

adjective CEFR A1 //naɪs//

An opinion adjective meaning pleasant or good.

They moved into a nice house.

Vocabulary

new

adjective CEFR A1 //nuː//

Recent or not previously owned/used.

We installed new software last week.

Vocabulary

tired

adjective CEFR A2 //ˈtaɪərd//

In need of rest; fatigued.

After the conference, the team looked tired.

GrammarPoint

look (linking verb)

verb CEFR A2 //lʊk//

A linking verb used to describe appearance or state; followed by an adjective.

You look confident in the presentation.

GrammarPoint

opinion (adjective type)

noun CEFR B1 //əˈpɪnjən//

A category of adjectives that express a personal judgment (e.g., nice, lovely).

Opinion adjectives (like 'nice') usually come before age adjectives (like 'new').